“While defendants have apologized to nearly everyone else, and admitted the offensiveness of the advertisement, they have yet to apologize to plaintiff,” who has become “the face of the Belvedere advertising campaign that jokes about rape,” the complaint said.

The lawsuit, filed in a California state court in Los Angeles, seeks compensatory and punitive damages.

Moet Hennessy did not immediately respond on Friday to requests for comment. Jeffrey Gersh, a lawyer for Packard, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

According to the complaint, the photo of Packard was a screenshot from a video from Strickly Viral Productions.

In that video, she and the man — her friend and Strickly Viral owner Chris Strickland — are asked by her parents to recreate a pose from a photo taken when they were young.

In its apology posted on its website, Belvedere called the ad “offensive” and “completely inappropriate,” and said it pulled the ad the day it was posted.

Belvedere Vodka has more than 936,000 Facebook fans and more than 10,300 Twitter followers.